A Supreme Court ruling to overturn the subsidies would not only disrupt care for millions of patients, but also harm the physician-patient relationship and fuel uncompensated care, said Robert B. Doherty, ACP’s senior vice president for governmental affairs and public policy.
“On a practical level, it would introduce chaos in the patient-physician relationship, especially if an adverse ruling by the Supreme Court took effect immediately, as people – including people, such as cancer patients, who are currently undergoing treatment – immediately lost their coverage, and their physicians and hospitals then have to figure out how to continue to get them the care they need without insurance,” Mr. Doherty said in an interview.
Estimates vary on how many Americans could lose subsidies in 2016 if the high court strikes down the financial assistance. An Urban Institute analysis estimated that just over 6 million people would lose coverage; one from RAND finds that individual-market enrollment would decline by an estimated 10 million people (70%). AvalereHealth found 7.5 million Americans could face a 255% rise in premiums if the Supreme Court strikes down the subsidies, according to a Feb. 26 analysis.
If the Supreme Court sides with King, a congressional fix would be imperative, ACP’s Mr. Doherty said. Another option would be for states that rely on the federal exchange to form their own exchanges in order to retain the subsidies and keep patients covered. But both options pose cost, procedural, and political challenges, Mr. Doherty said in an interview.
“The problem will be that it is hard to envision a fix that a majority of Republicans could support and that would be acceptable to Democrats and President Obama,” he said. “ ... Politics being politics, we could end up with a ‘blame game’ with both sides trying to blame the other for millions of people losing health insurance coverage.”
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